State of Missouri v. Joshua P. Hankins

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 21, 2023
DocketED111096
StatusPublished

This text of State of Missouri v. Joshua P. Hankins (State of Missouri v. Joshua P. Hankins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Missouri v. Joshua P. Hankins, (Mo. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District DIVISION THREE

STATE OF MISSOURI, ) No. ED111096 ) Respondent, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of St. Francois County v. ) ) Honorable Wendy L. Wexler Horn JOSHUA P. HANKINS, ) ) Appellant. ) Filed: November 21, 2023

Defendant Joshua P. Hankins appeals the judgment entered upon the jury’s verdict finding

him guilty of two counts of first-degree statutory sodomy, Section 566.062 RSMo. Defendant

contends the trial court’s instructions to the jury violated his constitutional right to a unanimous

verdict. Specifically, Defendant claims that multiple distinct acts of contact related to each count

were presented to the jury but that the jury instructions failed to specifically identify any one of

these incidents to ensure that the jury unanimously agreed to the same incident of statutory sodomy

in finding him guilty.

We hold that this case is governed by the recent decision of the Supreme Court of Missouri,

State v. Hamby, 669 S.W.3d 76 (Mo. banc 2023), and that the nature of the evidence abated any

risk that the jury did not substantially agree to the same act or acts described in the jury instructions

to support the verdicts. The trial court’s jury instructions, therefore, did not violate Defendant’s

constitutional right to a unanimous verdict. We affirm Defendant’s judgment of convictions. However, we must remand to the trial court for the limited purpose of directing the trial court to

enter an order nunc pro tunc to correct clerical mistakes in the trial court’s written judgment.

Factual and Procedural Background

Defendant’s convictions arise out of sexual abuse perpetrated against his step-daughter

[Victim]. 1 When Victim was twelve years old, Victim disclosed to a family friend that Defendant

had put his penis and fingers in her vagina. Victim also stated that she had seen “white stuff” come

out of Defendant’s penis. The friend called Victim’s mother. Victim then told her mother that

Defendant had touched her inappropriately, including putting his penis in her.

Mother took Victim to the hospital, where Victim told a social worker that Defendant had

molested her for five or six years. When asked what she meant by being molested, Victim stated

that Defendant had put his “boy private parts,” his fingers, and his tongue inside of her front private

parts. Victim explained that the abuse happened on the weekend when her mother was at work.

When asked how many times this had happened, Victim answered that she “didn’t know; a lot.”

Victim further explained that after she started her period, Defendant stopped using his tongue and

his “thingamajigger,” and only used his fingers. 2 She stated that he abused her two times after she

started her period and then the abuse stopped.

Mother next took Victim to the Children’s Advocacy Center for a forensic interview. A

recording of this interview was admitted into evidence and played for the jury at trial. Victim told

the interviewer that Defendant had molested her for about six years. Victim could not tell the

interviewer about the first time it happened, but said the incidents started when she was five, six,

or seven years old. Victim knew that the abuse was already occurring when she was eight years

old. Victim also told the interviewer that the abuse happened multiple times.

1 Defendant does not contest the sufficiency of the evidence to support his convictions. 2 “Thingamajigger” is the vernacular that Victim used to reference Defendant’s penis.

2 Victim related that the abuse happened in Defendant’s bedroom and that he always locked

the door. Victim said that the incidents only happened on the weekends or rarely on weekdays,

and that the abuse happened in the daytime. Defendant initiated the incidents by asking Victim

“Do you want to snuggle?” Victim stated that when she went to Defendant’s bedroom, he would

“put his thingamajigger,” or “boy’s private part,” in her “private part;” that he put his fingers in

her “private part;” and that he “put his tongue” in her “private part,” all during the same day.

Victim described a “random time” early on, when she was five, six, or seven years old, when

Defendant put his hand up her shirt, took her shirt off, unzipped her pants and took her pants off.

When asked by the interviewer to describe another time the abuse happened, Victim said that “it

was all pretty much the same thing … the entire list of everything [she] just told [the interviewer]

just happening again.” Victim related a time that she said occurred on a Saturday or Sunday, and

said that it involved the three different types of touching she had described earlier in the interview.

Victim lastly stated that Defendant only put his fingers in her after she started her period, which

occurred when she was eleven or twelve years old.

Based on Victim’s disclosures, the State charged Defendant with one count of first-degree

statutory sodomy alleging mouth-to-genital contact and one count of first-degree statutory sodomy

alleging hand-to-genital contact with the victim. 3 Both charges alleged that Defendant committed

these offenses between June 1, 2014 and October 12, 2018. The time-period charged ended on

Victim’s eleventh birthday.

The case proceeded to a jury trial. Victim testified that Defendant began to sexually abuse

her when the family moved to St. Francois County. Victim believed she was six years old at the

time. Victim testified that Defendant “put his penis inside [her][vagina],” that he “put his mouth

3 The State also charged Defendant with one count of statutory rape. The jury found Defendant not guilty of this charge.

3 on [her] vagina,” and that he “put his fingers in [her] vagina.” She further testified that every time

it happened, the “same kind of things would happen.” Victim explained that the abuse always took

place in her parents’ bedroom while her mother was at work and that the abuse usually happened

in the morning. Victim could not say how many times the abuse happened, and she did not know

any of the dates on which the abuse happened, but stated that the abuse happened “way too many”

times, and that it happened over a period of years. During her deposition prior to trial, Victim

stated that the abuse happened five times a week over a five-year period. At trial, she testified that

the abuse occurred less than five times a week over a five-year period. Victim admitted she could

only give a general story about what happened and that she could not say what year anything really

happened or what really happened on any given day. Victim could not tell [anyone] “one single

thing about what [Defendant] did to [her] on any particular day at any particular time in any

particular circumstance….” Victim lastly explained that the abuse only happened approximately

two times after she started having her period, which Victim stated began when she was eleven

years old. The abuse then stopped. Defendant only used his fingers on these last occasions.

The trial court submitted a verdict director for each charged count of first-degree statutory

sodomy, over Defendant’s objections. 4 Instruction No. 5 was the verdict-directing instruction for

the charged offense of mouth-to-genital contact:

INSTRUCTION NO. 5

As to Count I, if you find and believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt:

First, that on or about June 1, 2014, to October 12, 2018, in the County of St.

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Related

State v. Celis-Garcia
344 S.W.3d 150 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2011)
State of Missouri v. Andrew Luke Lemasters
456 S.W.3d 416 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2015)
State v. Brown
558 S.W.3d 105 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2018)

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State of Missouri v. Joshua P. Hankins, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-v-joshua-p-hankins-moctapp-2023.